Falcon59
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posted on 6/8/18 at 07:57 AM |
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Just starting
Hi guys,
As the subject says am 'just starting out' so would really appreciate some advice, hints and anything else you think would be helpful.
Should mention at this stage that I live in Australia.
Am in the research stage at the moment buying books and reading a lot so much that I am becoming a little confused. Am still looking for Chris Gibbs,
Build your own Sports Car on a budget, very hard to get here so if there is someone out there that might be able to help I would be great full.
Was thinking of using a BMW 3 Series for my donor vehicle and putting it in a Haynes, all seems pretty straight forward don't want to make it to
complicated on my first build, I have no aspirations that this will be simple or easy just want to to keep as less complicated as I can, so having
said that I would appreciate your help.
Thanks heaps..
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Nickp
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posted on 6/8/18 at 09:18 AM |
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Good choice of donor. I used an E36 328i engine and box for my Haynes.
Here's a bit of a build thread- http://www.locostbuilders.co.uk/viewthread.php?tid=198679&page=1
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HowardB
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posted on 6/8/18 at 10:39 AM |
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someone will come along soon to advise one way or the other, but I have a vague recollection that in Australia the chassis has to be much stiffer than
a book one,. perhaps I read it on the Geko thread,..
Howard
Fisher Fury was 2000 Zetec - now a 1600 (it Lives again and goes zoom)
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Mr Whippy
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posted on 6/8/18 at 10:56 AM |
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yeah I think I'd be looking at what it takes to get a kit car registered and tested where you are as they'll no doubt be very different to
the UK
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theconrodkid
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posted on 6/8/18 at 12:15 PM |
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there is an Australian forum that would may be usefull to join but last time i was there, they had no sense of humour and a couple of us got booted
off for making a joke, they were also very much more into drawing things that actually making anything, after watching "mighty car mods"
i wonder if it is at all posible.
who cares who wins
pass the pork pies
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hughpinder
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posted on 6/8/18 at 12:49 PM |
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If I was starting now, I'd probably build midlana (mid engined, using a FWD drivetrain at the back), even though the book is quite expensive to
buy.
I have a copy and like the design. You will need a mx5 donor, which if you choose carefully could provide most of the suspension uprights, brakes,
handbrake, seats, possibly wheels, heater matrix, wipers etc. I would go for a honda civic typeR with damaged body, so cheap, or similar as the engine
donor (partly because that is what he uses in the book), from which you take the engine, box, engine electrics etc, and there is a decent tuning scene
if 220 bhp isn't enough for you. The book tells you what to buy in advance (so you can check it will fit the chassis if you are not using the
same kit as he did), and also which measurements are critical and which make little difference if you need to modify to fit your engine, seats or
whatever. There are no places to buy flatpack steel or ready made chassis though, so you will need to do that yourself.
See
https://midlana.com/
or several posts on this forum
Regards
Hugh
[Edited on 6/8/18 by hughpinder]
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HowardB
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posted on 6/8/18 at 04:35 PM |
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quote: Originally posted by HowardB
someone will come along soon to advise one way or the other, but I have a vague recollection that in Australia the chassis has to be much stiffer than
a book one,. perhaps I read it on the Geko thread,..
Found this - mods to the book chassis
linky-dinky
HTH
Howard
Fisher Fury was 2000 Zetec - now a 1600 (it Lives again and goes zoom)
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big_wasa
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posted on 6/8/18 at 04:45 PM |
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The books are every where over here as long as you realise the postage will cost more than the book some one will sell you one.
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